Manufacturer not liable for distributor’s false ads

GOJO Industries, Inc. v. Innovative Biodefense, Inc., 2015
WL 7019836, No. 15 Civ. 2946 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 12, 2015)
 
Defendant IBD moved for a preliminary injunction against
GOJO and nonparty distributors of GOJO products barring them from making representations
that GOJO products are FDA approved and from using government agency logos in
an online video. The court denied the motion.
 
GOJO sued IBD for falsely advertising that its Zylast hand
sanitizing products were “FDA approved” and for deceptively using the FDA logo
in ads, as well as for making false claims about GOJO’s Purell hand sanitizing
products. The parties stipulated to an order preliminarily enjoining IBD and
its authorized agent from representing that Zylast products were FDA approved
and from using the FDA logo in advertisements.  IBD then sought a preliminary injunction against
similar “FDA approved” representations in the sale of GOJO products and use of
CDC, World Health Organization, and Health Canada logos in an educational
handwashing video on the Purell website.  IBD’s evidence about “FDA approved” was from
websites belonging to nonparty distributors and a nonparty independent sales
rep.  A March 2014 email chain between
GOJO’s National Account Director and an independent distributor in which the
GOJO employee provided instructions on the correct names for GOJO products and
also provided current product images.
 
GOJO argued that the nonparty distributors were not GOJO’s
agents or under GOJO’s control and that it had removed the logos from the
educational video on the Purell website. “In order for a nonparty to be bound, that
entity must either aid and abet the defendant or be legally identified with
it.” IBD didn’t introduce evidence of an agency relationship with any of the
distributors. Providing basic information about product names and images wasn’t
enough.

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Christmas in November: No TRO for alleged false advertising because no showing of irreparable harm

Balsam Brands Inc. v. Cinmar, LLC, 2015 WL 7015417, No.
15-cv-04829 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 12, 2015)
 
Balsam sought a TRO based on claimed patent rights in an
invertible artificial Christmas tree, the “Flip Tree,” that includes a “pivot
joint” in the trunk that separates the trunk into two parts and allows the tree
to fold for simplified set up and storage. They sued Cinmar, aka Frontgate, for
selling allegedly infringing artificial Christmas trees, as well as for false
marking/false advertising.
 
Plaintiffs failed to show standing to sue for patent
infringement, and also defendants raised a substantial question of whether the
accused trees were infringing.  For the
non-patent claims, Balsam didn’t show irreparable harm.  Balsam alleged that (1) Frontgate has
marketed the accused trees as “featuring patented inversion technology,” but
Frontgate lacks patent rights in the inversion technology featured in the
trees; and (2) Frontgate has marketed the accused trees as featuring “exclusive
inversion technology,” but the inversion technology featured in the trees is
not exclusive to it, because plaintiffs also use the same technology.
 
The only evidence of irreparable harm came from Balsam’s
CEO, whose declaration said:
 
Based on Frontgate’s holiday
marketing promotions in past years, Balsam expects Frontgate to advertise a
variety of price promotions and discounts throughout the Christmas selling
season. For example, over the October 24 weekend, Frontgate is offering $50
back for every $200 spent, resulting in a 25% discount. Balsam will soon need
to decide whether to lower its own prices to compete with Frontgate’s
infringing products.
Frontgate’s sale of infringing
invertible trees, and its false advertising claiming it’s the exclusive
provider of such trees and that it even owns the patent on them, erodes Balsam
Hill’s identity as an innovation leader. Frontgate’s actions also discredit our
marketing campaign promoting our exclusive right to the Flip Trees.
Frontgate’s actions are also
costing us sales and market share. Catalog and ecommerce businesses depend on
acquiring new customers and then benefiting from the lifetime value of those
customers. Typical ecommerce or catalog retailers like Frontgate may break even
or even lose money on initial sales to new customers. Their strategy is to
acquire customers and then build lifetime relationships that lead to downstream
sales. Former Frontgate employees have told me that Frontgate in particular
uses trees as its acquisition tool, and then later sells décor and many other
products to those customers.
Each lifetime customer relationship
Frontgate builds using infringing trees and false advertising is a lifetime
relationship potentially lost to Balsam Hill. And because our brand and not
just our Flip Tree is under fire, we also stand to lose downstream customers
and sales across our whole product line. This includes conventional Christmas
trees, wreaths, garlands, ornaments, stockings, tree skirts, and other
products. These losses may last a lifetime.
Christmas trees are highly
seasonal. Our business grows tremendously each week in October and November and
hits a fever pitch by the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. Based on 2013 and 2014
sales data, … A single poor Christmas season could be devastating to the
company.
 
Whether the false advertising claims actually go to anything
material, you have to admit, that’s a lot better than many harm declarations
do.  However, the court noted, the
majority of the irreparable harm came from the fact of the allegedly infringing
sales, not from the allegedly false
advertising.  Without additional evidence
of “eroded identity as an innovation leader,” “discredited exclusive right,” or
“lost lifetime customer relationships” actually occurring, the claim of
immediate irreparable harm was too speculative.
 
In addition, Frontgate submitted a declaration that its description
of its trees as “featuring patented inversion technology” was based on its
misunderstanding that the pending application on the slotted hinge technology
had already issued, and that it had since removed the offending language from
its website.  The only allegedly false
statements in Frontgate’s catalogs were that Frontgate’s trees feature
“exclusive, state-of-the-art technology guaranteed to make setup a snap,” and
that Frontgate’s “exclusive new Inversion tree goes from packed-away to put-up
in about a minute.” Plaintiffs didn’t show a likelihood of immediate harm from
those statements that couldn’t be adequately addressed by money damages.
 
Finally, plaintiffs’ delay in seeking a TRO was also
noticeable.  Plaintiffs allegedly learned
on August 18, 2015 that Frontgate was selling the accused trees, and presumably
learned of the alleged false advertising around the same time. But they didn’t
file their complaint until October 20, 2015 and did not seek a TRO until
October 26, 2015, just days before the start of the month when Balsam alleged that
they generally earn approximately 50 percent of their annual revenue. A ten-week
delay “would be of little if any concern in most circumstances, given the
extent to which plaintiffs emphasize the importance of the holiday shopping
season in claiming that they will suffer irreparable harm, their failure to
seek injunctive relief sooner further weighs against this claim.”

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Up stone creek without a paddle: Dawn Donut precludes relief for distant plaintiff

Stone Creek Inc. v. Omnia Italian Design Inc., 2015 WL
6865704, No. CV-13-00688 (D. Az. Nov. 9, 2015)
 
Stone Creek makes and sells furniture in Arizona, operating
only out of Phoenix, except for a short-lived 2004-2008 expansion to Dallas,
Texas.  Its mark, as of 1990, was a “red
oval- shape circle around the words ‘Stone Creek.’ ”  It has a registration (filing date 2011) for
furniture for STONE CREEK in standard character form as well as for its logo.  The defendant copied its logo exactly and
used it for furniture sold in the upper Midwest; the court denies all relief, reaffirming
Dawn Donut’s applicability in the
internet age, and reinforcing that the “exclusive nationwide rights” granted by
a federal registration are only as exclusive as courts allow.
 

The court found that household furniture “is typically sold
locally to customers living within a drivable radius from the furniture outlet
retail store,” given the size, weight, and shipping costs of furniture, as well
the customers’ preference to see and sit on the furniture.  Stone Creek had a website, but didn’t sell
furniture directly through its site or otherwise sell via the internet.  Stone Creek would have liked to expand, but
there were no actual plans to do so after the closing of the Dallas operations.
 
Meanwhile, defendant Bon-Ton was a large retailer that
operates furniture galleries in Illinois, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and
Michigan.  Defendant Omnia’s products were
sold to purchasers living within 200 miles of a Bon-Ton Furniture gallery, including
portions of Iowa, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and
Michigan, aka the Bon Ton trading territory (BTTT).  The parties’ territories were separated by
over 1000 miles at the closest.
 
In 1993-1998, Stone Creek advertised in Southwest Airlines Spirit
magazine and America West’s in-flight magazine, whose airlines travelled
throughout the BTTT.  Still, the airline
magazines and Stone Creek’s other advertising venues didn’t have a significant
presence in the BTTT, and the court found that none of them created awareness
of Stone Creek in the BTTT.
 
Stone Creek put its mark on its website, stonecreekfurniture.com,
as early as 2000, and hired a SEO firm, which enabled consumers to find Stone
Creek’s website by going to stonecreekfurniture.com or by searching for “stone
creek” and “leather,” “furniture” or “sofa.” 
Nonetheless, the court found that the website didn’t create awareness of
Stone Creek in the BTTT, and that the “vast majority” of Google searches for
Stone Creek Furniture originated in Arizona; only a negligible number were from
the BTTT.  Many non-furniture businesses
in the BTTT used the name “Stone Creek.” 
In defendants’ survey, 99.75% of BTTT respondents were not familiar with
Stone Creek in Arizona.
 
Stone Creek’s sales were over $200 million since inception,
but only approximately 0.3% of its total sales occurred in the BTTT.  The largest sales were in Illinois, with
about $350,000 in sales from 1996-2009 and 2011-2013, representing more than
half of the total BTTT sales.  The total
came from approximately 150 customers, out of 65,000 transactions total since
Stone Creek’s inception. These numbers were “trivial,” the court said, and
there was no evidence about how these 150 customers discovered Stone Creek.
 
In 2003, Stone Creek met Omnia, a California-based
manufacturer of leather furniture, at a trade show in San Francisco. They
entered into an agreement that Omnia would make leather branded with Stone
Creek’s mark for Stone Creek, an agreement that lasted until 2012. 
 
Bon-Ton had been one of Omnia’s significant customers since
2008, and it wanted a private label brand to avoid competition with Omnia’s
other customers, ideally a label with an “American made name.” Omnia’s
president offered several suggestions, including STONE CREEK, which Bon Ton
liked; Omnia offered it because it “sounded American” and because marketing
materials and a logo were already prepared. Omnia copied the mark from Stone
Creek-provided materials, including the identical logo. However, the court
found that Omnia didn’t intend to trade off Stone Creek’s goodwill. Omnia never
consulted an attorney about this. Omnia’s president understood that Stone Creek
sold in the Phoenix area, but he never researched where Stone Creek sold its
furniture.
 
From 2008-2013, Omnia sold leather furniture to Bon-Ton
branded with the STONE CREEK mark. That year, after inquiries from individuals
in the BTTT, Stone Creek asked Omnia if it sold products under the STONE CREEK
mark to other companies. Stone Creek’s president also fielded a telephone call about
a customer concerned about a warranty issue on a leather sofa. The customer indicated
that he purchased the sofa from a Bon-Ton store in Chicago and that he had a
warranty document with the STONE CREEK mark on it, from which he ended up at
Stone Creek’s website.
 
Omnia’s VP of sales confirmed to Stone Creek: “Ron, yes, we
do sell our products to those stores under their marketing name ‘Stone Creek
Leather.’ … In this day of internet shopping and surfing, it is unfortunate and
probably a nuisance for you that your stores are receiving inquiries regarding
these products due to the similar name…” 
 
After Stone Creek complained, Omnia changed Stone Creek to
Red Canyon. The court found that Stone Creek’s mark had no goodwill,
reputation, or consumer recognition in the BTTT, and that there was no actual
confusion by a consumer who bought Omnia Stone Creek furniture in the BTTT.
 
Stone Creek failed to meet its burden of showing likely, not
merely possible, confusion.  Even if
Stone Creek had shown that a trivial number of purchasers had been actually
confused, a trivial number wasn’t enough.
 
Although the Stone Creek mark was strong in Arizona, it wasn’t
recognized in the BTTT for its relationship to Stone Creek; the goods and marks
were the same, but the parties had distinct marketing channels “with no
opportunity for crossover” because of the local nature of the furniture
industry.  Because furniture is
expensive, consumers are supposed to exercise greater care.  Bon-Ton selected the mark because it had an
American sound to it, and because the marketing material and logo already
existed and were in the possession of Omnia, without intent to trade off of Stone
Creek’s goodwill.  And Stone Creek had no
plans to expand.  Thus the factors
favored Bon-Ton.

Under Dawn Donut, “Even where the Sleekcraft factors weigh in favor of the
[plaintiff],…territorial divisions may prevent confusion. An unauthorized
junior mark user…can contest likelihood of confusion by arguing that, since
‘the registrant and the unauthorized user are confined to two sufficiently
distinct and geographically separate markets,’ there is no likelihood of
confusion.” Also, though the court doesn’t discuss this, because of the timing
of the registration application, it appears that Bon-Ton was a §33(b) local
user, protected against liability because it began use before the application
date.  (Though no longer protected, because its use has now ceased.)  Thus, even likely confusion wouldn’t
have entitled Stone Creek to prevail … but if I were Bon-Ton, I’d be pretty mad
at Omnia for getting us into this.

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FTC is entitled to presumption of reliance in enforcing consent order

FTC v. BlueHippo Funding, LLC, No. 1:08-cv-01819 (S.D.N.Y.
Nov. 6, 2015)
 
BlueHippo stipulated to a final judgment and permanent
injunction against certain sales practices. 
The FTC moved for a contempt finding based on the practices described
below, which was granted in part and denied in part; the Second Circuit vacated
the damages portion of the order (the denial) and remanded for consideration of
whether a presumption of consumer reliance applied to the facts of the case.  The court here held that it did.
 
The facts: BlueHippo was an installment credit company that
marketed computers and other electronic products to “credit-challenged”
consumers who’d make an initial down payment followed by thirteen additional
payments.  Consumers who successfully
made that series of payments would get a computer and would be enrolled in
BlueHippo’s financing plan to pay the remaining balance.
 
BlueHippo’s challenged store credit and refund policy was to
refuse a refund after seven days of the first payment, instead offering store
credits.  But BlueHippo didn’t tell
consumers at the time of their initial payment that store credits could not be
applied to any applicable shipping and handling fees or taxes. The FTC alleged
that BlueHippo had violated the part of the consent order enjoining it from
making representations about its “refund, cancellation, exchange, or repurchase
policy without disclosing clearly and conspicuously, prior to receiving any
payment from customers all material terms and conditions of any refund,
cancellation, exchange, or repurchase policy.” The FTC sought $14 million in
damages, which represented the losses of the 55,892 customers that had made at
least one payment in the relevant time period, but had received neither a
computer nor store merchandise.
 
Previously, the court awarded $610,000 in damages,
representing the losses of the 677 consumers who had made all of the requisite
installment payments to qualify for BlueHippo’s financing plan but had received
neither a computer nor store credit.  But
it held the FTC failed to show damages for the others.  The Second Circuit, in vacating, emphasized
that information about the shipping and handling fees and taxes, “if it had
been revealed to consumers before they purchased computers from BlueHippo, in
all likelihood would have influenced their purchasing decisions.”
 
Recognizing the “inherent difficulty of demonstrating
individual harm,” the Second Circuit wrote that “[p]ermitting a presumption of
reliance in FTC claims for contempt damages would thus further the Commission’s
statutory purpose to protect consumers.” The presumption is triggered by “showing
that (1) the defendant made material misrepresentations or omissions that were
of a kind usually relied upon by reasonable prudent persons; (2) the
misrepresentations or omissions were widely disseminated; and (3) consumers
actually purchased the defendants’ products.”  If the presumption is satisfied, then the FTC
starts with the defendant’s gross receipts and the defendant can prove offsets.
 
At this point, defendants argued only that the FDC didn’t
meet its burden of showing misrepresentations or omissions of the kind usually
relied upon by reasonable prudent persons. 
The FTC didn’t show that BlueHippo actually charged shipping, handling,
or taxes to a significant number of consumers, so there was nothing “usual”
about the omissions.  But “the injury to
the consumer (and thus BlueHippo’s violation) occurs at the moment the consumer
makes his or her initial payment.”  Consumers were led to believe that they were
making essentially risk-free payments: they’d either get a computer or they’d
be able to apply their payments to purchases from the online store.  But in fact consumers would have to make
additional payments in the form of shipping, handling, or taxes if they sought
to utilize the online store option.  “Even
if few or no consumers actually paid shipping, handling or taxes … , that says
nothing about whether those fees, when eventually disclosed, deterred cash-strapped
consumers from making online purchases at all. Indeed, the FTC introduced
evidence of exactly that occurring.” Thus, the FTC was entitled to a
presumption of reliance and damages starting with defendants’ gross receipts.

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Why we need an anti-SLAPP law: skeptic’s articles still not commercial speech

Tobinick v. Novella, No. 9:14–CV–80781, 2015 WL 6777458
(S.D. Fla. Sept. 30, 2015)
 
This case is a good example of the need for a federal
anti-SLAPP statute.  Although many claims
have been dismissed, the court here finally resolved Lanham Act false
advertising/state law unfair competition claims against Dr. Steven Novella, who
wrote two articles published online atsciencebasedmedicine.org. Both articles
address the practice of Dr. Edward Tobinick, who provides medical treatment to
patients with “unmet medical needs.”  The
first article, “Enbrel for Stroke and Alzheimer’s,” responded to a piece
published in the Los Angeles Times. As Novella described it,
 
The [Times ] story revolves around
Dr. Edward Tobinick and his practice of perispinal etanercept (Enbrel) for a
long and apparently growing list of conditions. Enbrel is an FDA-approved drug
for the treatment of severe rheumatoid arthritis. …Tobinick is using Enbrel for
many off-label indications, one of which is Alzheimer’s disease (the focus of
the LA Times story).
 
The allegedly false statements concerned the viability of Tobinick’s
treatments, the scientific literature discussing those treatments, the size and
locations of Tobinick’s businesses, and the categorization of Tobinick’s
practice as “health fraud.” Novella’s second article, “Another Lawsuit To
Suppress Legitimate Criticism – This Time SBM,” came out after Novella first
sued. It largely restated the content of the first, and also said Novella
couldn’t find double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trials for the treatment
provided by Tobinick.
 
Gordon & Breach
supplies the test for what’s commercial advertising or promotion, but post-Lexmark, it’s minus the commercial
competition prong.  So: (1) commercial
speech; (2) for the purpose of influencing consumers to buy defendant’s goods
or services; (3) disseminated sufficiently to the relevant purchasing public to
constitute “advertising” or “promotion” within that industry.
 
“Commercial speech” was dispositive here. Central Hudson described commercial
speech as “expression related solely to the economic interests of the speaker
and its audience.” Bolger “suggest[s]
certain guideposts for classifying speech that contains both commercial and
noncommercial elements; relevant considerations include whether: (1) the speech
is an advertisement; (2) the speech refers to a specific product; and (3) the
speaker has an economic motivation for the speech.”   
 
The articles here proposed no commercial transaction, and
weren’t related solely to the economic interests of the speaker and its
audience. They clearly intended to raise public awareness about issues
pertaining to Tobinick’s treatments. 
They were also unlike the commercial speech in Bolger: they were not concededly advertisements; the only products
referenced were Tobinick’s treatments; to the extent the second article
referred to Novella’s practice, “it is in direct response to the instant
litigation as opposed to an independent plug for that practice.” 
 
Finally, the court didn’t find that the alleged “economic
motivation” for the speech was sufficient, even though SGU Productions, a
for-profit company controlled by Novella, earns money by selling advertisements
on its website (skepticsguide.net), advertisements in a podcast, memberships, and
goods such as t-shirts.  Speech isn’t
commercial speech just because it’s sold for profit.  Plus, the specific evidence here didn’t point
to a strong economic motive for the speech: there was no evidence that Novella
earned any money from SGU, whose goal was “to educate people in science and
critical thinking.”
 
The state law claims fell because the Lanham Act claims did.
 
The court has already denied a fee request in another iteration of this case, which seems odd to me, but that just highlights the insufficiency of speech protections for critics under current law.

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Instant lack of gratification: coffee class certified

Suchanek v. Sturm Foods, Inc., 2015 WL 6689359, No.
11-CV-565 (S.D. Ill. Nov. 3, 2015)
 
After the district court’s initial dismissal of this class
action case was resoundingly
reversed
, the case returned and was here certified by a new district judge,
the prior judge having retired during the pendency of the appeal.  In Seventh Circuit style, the opinion also resolves
a number of evidentiary challenges to plaintiffs’ claim that Sturm falsely
advertised its instant coffee as ground.
 
Sturm made single-serve coffee cups for use in Keurig
machines under the name Grove Square Coffee (GSC). While Sturm allegedly sold
GSC as premium, ground coffee, it was actually more than 95% instant coffee. Plaintiffs
sued Sturm for violating the consumer protection statutes and unjust enrichment
laws of Alabama, California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
South Carolina, and Tennessee.
 
Plaintiff submitted the testimony of Bobby Calder, a
professor at Northwestern University who teaches consumer behavior and
marketing strategies. Plaintiffs submitted his opinions to show that the issue
of liability is capable of resolution on a class-wide basis and predominates
over the individual issues.  Calder’s
report had two sets of opinions. The first, based on his review of GSC
packaging, Sturm’s marketing documents, and consumer complaints, concluded
that:
 
A reasonable consumer would have
been led to falsely believe that [GSC] contained regular ground coffee for
brewing in a Keurig machine….Usage of the word “instant” on the package in a
non-prominent way would not have been sufficient to prevent consumers being
misled and deceived….(and) Sturm’s plan for marketing the [GSC] product was
at its heart intended to distract consumers from realizing that the product
quality or standard was instant coffee and not regular ground coffee for
brewing.
 
Sturm argued that this opinion should be excluded because it
wasn’t based on evidence of actual consumer perceptions, specifically a
survey.  But a consumer survey is not the
only acceptable evidence of consumer deception; testimony from consumers or
appropriate experts can also suffice. 
Calder had plenty of evidence that went to consumer deception:  Sturm’s own research showed that Keurig users
did not want instant coffee, so Sturm avoided using the word “instant” on the
label. Sturm also conducted product testing to see if consumers noticed the
physical differences between GSC cups and regular K-cups that signaled GSC was
instant coffee. Most importantly, in hundreds of consumer complaints, people said
they felt “disappointed, dissatisfied, displeased, disgusted, swindled, robbed,
cheated, ripped off, duped, and misled. Others said GSC was a hoax, deceptive,
an absolute fraud, a rip off, a sad joke, a gross misrepresentation, a clearly
substandard instant coffee disguised as a Keurig k-cup, and a waste of money.”  Calder didn’t need a survey when he had
“oodles” of complaints that were explicit about what consumers thought.
 
Calder also designed and conducted a study in which he
interviewed twenty-three randomly recruited individuals in Chicago who owned
and used Keurig machines. The participants overwhelmingly identified single-serve
brands with the quality of ground roasted coffees, not instant coffees, and
therefore expected GSC “to be a traditional ground coffee filtered from roasted
beans that did not contain instant coffee.” After a product demonstration, the
participants “changed their minds dramatically.” Qualitative results also
showed the participants “for the most part realized that they had been misled.”
 
Sturm challenged the survey, and frankly if Sturm hadn’t
been such an obvious bad actor here (try to imagine a survey that wouldn’t have
found confusion!) I’d have had sympathy for it. 
I would not use this case to argue for the admissibility of similar
surveys in closer cases. Sturm argued that Calder used an improper universe, an
unrepresentative sample from the universe, and ambiguous, imprecise, and biased
questions.  Nor did he use a control
group, replicate the store environment, or use a double-blind format. 
 
But the court found that Calder’s opinions based on this
survey weren’t critical to class certification, and in any event it wasn’t so
fundamentally flawed as to be inadmissible. The universe of current Keurig
users was close enough to the set of potential GSC consumers, and Calder’s use
of a convenience sample was routine in surveys conducted by experts in
marketing and in deceptive advertising cases. After all, Sturm’s own market
research comprised interviews with only seven consumers  Nor did Calder bias participants by displaying
a GSC cup and a Green Mountain cup simultaneously at the beginning of the study
and then asking if single-serve coffee cups were more similar to ground coffee
or instant coffee. Sturm didn’t explain how the simple presence of the Green
Mountain cup injected an impermissible bias into the study.
 
The questions weren’t so flawed as to make the study
excludable.  “To the extent Calder’s
questions elicited ambiguous responses, participants immediately explained
their responses.”  Though the questions
were close-ended, that can be ok, especially “for assessing choices between
well-identified options or obtaining rating on a clear set of alternatives.”
Nor did the absence of a “no opinion” or “don’t know” option invalidate the
study, because participants were still able to indicate neutrality and were
encouraged to offer commentary during their interview. “Despite the lack of a
‘don’t know’ option, participants commented on their uncertainty in a number of
instances. Calder also told the participants that if they were unsure about a
question, they should ask him for an explanation.”
 
Nor did the lack of a control group make the study
inadmissible, because in the before and after format (in which the truth was
revealed to consumers and then they were asked about GSC again) each
participant served as his or her own control. 
“Likewise, the failure to conduct a double-blind study does not make
Calder’s study wholly inadmissible; it simply limits the reliability of it.”  (This is the weakest point.) 
 
Finally, the study wasn’t inadmissible because Calder
pointed out and read aloud six sections of the GSC package that plaintiffs
contended were deceptive, unlike what would happen in a real store.  The point was to figure out whether those
sections were misleading, so reading them was necessary to ensure that the
participants saw that information, an approach used in other surveys as well.
 
The court also rejected challenges to plaintiffs’ damages
expert Candace Preston.  Sturm argued
that her model was unreliable because it assumed that, if GSC had been marketed
truthfully, consumers wouldn’t have bought it at all.  This assumption was supported by Calder’s
opinion and by customer complaints. 
Sturm further argued that Preston’s assumption was contradicted by
favorable consumer comments, but “[t]his argument is laughable. Ten positive
reviews do not somehow negate the hundreds, if not thousands, of bad (sometimes
scathing) reviews, particularly when there is evidence that Defendants had
their employees write fake, positive reviews.” 
Yikes. 
 
Further, after the Seventh Circuit suggested that a partial
refund might be appropriate relief here (cold comfort for coffee drinkers who
never wanted to buy instant in the first place, but ok), Preston developed a
model for calculating the amount of such a refund, which the court refused to
exclude.  Using the cost of other instant
coffees as a measure seemed perfectly appropriate.  “Defendants quibble that this fails to take
into account any value associated with the k-cup brewing system ….”  But so what? As one of Calder’s interviewees
said, “It’s kind of like why bother to have a Keurig with Grove Square? Add the
water and call it a day. You’re paying for the separate tubs. I could just take
a spoon and drop it in if that’s all the Grove Square is.”
 
Defendant’s expert, Neal Roese, was a social psychologist at
Northwestern University with expertise on judgment and decision-making. He
opined that there was no uniform or typical consumer decision process across
consumers who have purchased GSC; instead, there were significant variations.  Although he relied on the named plaintiffs’ deposition
testimony about their individual purchase decisions, and plaintiffs thought he
should have interviewed other purchasers, the court didn’t think that
mattered.  “Regardless of what he read or
who he talked to, Roese was going to reach the conclusion that there was a
significant variation in consumers’ decision-making process when it came to
purchasing GSC.”  (Ulp.)  Of course no two decisions are exactly the
same.  That did not show lack of
typicality or that individual issues predominated.  The report wasn’t unreliable or irrelevant
under Daubert; it just wasn’t useful.
 
Sturm did win exclusion of the opinions of Robert Klein, an
expert witness in Keurig’s false advertising lawsuit against Sturm, since he
wasn’t disclosed as an expert before the deadlines had passed, and his
testimony was not admissible under any other theory.
 
On to class certification, excluding online purchasers and
no longer seeking injunctive relief. Moreover, since plaintiffs failed to brief
unjust enrichment, the court only ruled on the consumer protection law claims.
 
The Seventh Circuit set forth the law of the case on
commonality: “The question whether the GSC packaging was likely to mislead a
reasonable consumer is common to the claims of every class member.”  Its reasoning also strongly suggested that
typicality was satisfied. Typicality means that the named representative’s
claim “arises from the same event or practice or course of conduct that gives
rise to the claims of other class members and…[the] claims are based on the
same legal theory.”  As the court of
appeals said, “the plaintiffs’ claims and those of the class they would like to
represent all derive from a single course of conduct by Sturm: the marketing
and packaging of GSC.” It continued: “[t]he same legal standards govern every
class member’s claim; [Defendant] admits in its brief that ‘[a]ll of the
applicable state consumer protection laws require proof that a statement is
either (1) literally false, or (2) likely to mislead (either through a
statement or material omission) a reasonable consumer.’ ” Sturm nonetheless
argued that typicality was not satisfied because the class members “bought GSC
for different reasons and formed their beliefs about it for different reasons.”
 For example, “[s]ome Plaintiffs bought
GSC because a retailer placed it on a shelf near the Keurig k-cups. Others
bought GSC because they wanted to try something new. Still others bought GSC
because of its low price.”  But
typicality didn’t require all class members to have the same perceptions and knowledge
about GSC and the same preferences and reasons. “In fact, when it comes to
consumer fraud class actions, individual differences are to be expected.”

The class members here were exposed to the same misrepresentations, and their
claims were essentially the same: they were duped into believing they were
purchasing ground coffee, and they would not have purchased GSC (or paid as
much as they did) had they known it was actually instant coffee. 
 
Likewise, though different named plaintiffs identified different
parts of the packaging as deceptive, they were adequate, especially given
record evidence showed that “hundreds, if not thousands, of other consumers
held the same mistaken belief and were equally disappointed upon learning the
true nature of the product.”  It didn’t
matter whether some were misled solely by affirmative misrepresentations and
images versus material omissions versus a combination of the above.  “[A]ll of their claims stand or fall on the
issue of whether a reasonable consumer was likely to be misled by the overall
packaging, not any one particular attribute or omission.”  And they all suffered the same injury:
overpaying or buying a product they wouldn’t have bought if they’d known the
truth.  Any differences wouldn’t create
misaligned incentives among class members and the class representatives, which
is the concern behind the adequacy requirement.
 
Under Rule 23(b)(3), damages must be susceptible of
measurement across the entire class, which requires “a single or common method
that can be used to measure and quantify the damages of each class member.” A
full refund would be justified if the product was worthless to its
purchasers.  Sturm argued that GSC wasn’t
completely worthless because it provided convenience, hydration, and caffeine,
and cited four cases rejecting full refunds in cases involving deceptive
food/beverage packaging. But two were unpublished, one had minimal analysis,
and one explicitly distinguished Sturm. 
 
The court shares my reaction: “if there was ever a case where
[a full refund] theory was appropriate, this may be it,” given the extensive
evidence of but-for causation.  Only
consumers who owned a Keurig machine, or were buying for an owner, would buy
GSC, and “there is plenty of evidence showing that, when it came to coffee,
Keurig machine owners wanted to brew only premium, fresh, ground coffee.” Further,
Sturm was fully aware of Keurig machine owners’ preferences and “went to great
lengths to disguise the fact that GSC was not premium, fresh, ground coffee,”
with the result that hundreds of consumers complained.  There was on the other side “absolutely no
evidence that some consumers may have still purchased GSC had they known GSC
was instant coffee,” or that some consumers did know the truth but still bought
it.  A finder of fact could conclude that
the product was worthless to its consumers.
 
Plus, if a full refund wasn’t appropriate, damages could
still be calculated by subtracting the actual value of GSC, which could be
calculated from the price per cup of equivalent instant coffee.
 
Predominance: liability for deception was particularly
appropriate for class-wide resolution, because all of the applicable consumer
protection statutes required proof that Sturm’s statement was “likely to
mislead a reasonable consumer.”  The
necessary proof, survey evidence and expert testimony, was common to all class
members, and was costly enough to make multiple individual lawsuits duplicative
and wasteful, though of course they wouldn’t even happen.
 
Proximate causation and reliance might require
individualized proof, but these were much simpler issues than liability, and the
necessary information was more accessible to individual litigants, who knew
their own mental states, than the information needed to prove liability. Thus,
plaintiffs showed predominance and superiority.
 
The class was ascertainable by reference to objective
criteria: in-store purchasers of GSC defrauded by packaging during a specific
period in particular states.  The Seventh
Circuit has explicitly rejected a heightened (receipt-based) ascertainability
requirement as inconsistent with the purpose of class actions. Nor was the
class overbroad because some consumers might not have been deceived; there’s a
difference between class members who could not have been harmed and those who
were not harmed.  Though Sturm modified
the package to change it from saying “soluble and microground” to “instant and
microground” during the class period, Sturm didn’t show how many purchasers of
the modified packaging existed, and plaintiffs in any event provided evidence
that this change didn’t prevent deception and that complaints continued. As far
as the court could tell, the modified package kept all the other allegedly
deceptive features, and in any event, the basic problem—that the K-cup form
misrepresented the true nature of the product—remained the same.
 
Alabama, Tennessee, and South Carolina consumer protection
statutes allow only individual actions, but Shady Grove Orthopedic Assoc., P.A.
v. Allstate Ins. Co., 559 U.S. 393 (2010), held that a nearly identical New
York rule shouldn’t be applied in federal court, because Rule 23 controlled and
didn’t alter substantive rights. 
Although the Supreme Court was divided 4-1-4, it clearly held that the
New York rule didn’t apply in federal court, and Sturm identified no legal
differences between the New York provision and the state provisions at issue
here.
 
Seriously, guys: get out the checkbook and start writing.

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estimated retail value claim isn’t puffery

Kabbash v. Jewelry Channel, Inc. USA, 2015 WL 6690236 (C.D.
Cal. Nov. 2, 2015)
 
Holding of most general interest: “Estimated retail value”
statements and statements of discount or savings amounts at check-out where the
discount calculations were based on that estimated retail value were not
puffery, because they were specific and quantifiable.  The phrase “estimated retail value” “can
reasonably be read to imply that the figure is at least measurably based on a
list retail price that is presumed to be suggested by the manufacturer and
capable of verification,” reinforced by a checkout notice such as, “You saved
$130.00 today!” with the dollar figure in bold type.”  Defendant argued that the estimated retail
value was merely an opinion—an estimate (opinion) of value (also opinion).  That ignored the meaning of “retail” in the
phrase—individually, those terms could be puffery, but “estimated retail value”
“is anchored in fact by a quantifiable retail price.”  The FTC and securities cases have also agreed
that misrepresentations of costs can be misleading and are too specific to be
puffery.
 
The court also, contrary to a number of district courts in
the Ninth Circuit, found that the named plaintiffs could seek injunctive relief
on behalf of a class, given the purpose of California’s consumer protection
laws.  “Because some members of the class
do not have the same knowledge as Plaintiffs now do, there is a likelihood of
repeat injury for the class as a whole, and on the basis of ‘class standing,’
the claims may proceed.”

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Transformative work of the day, Star Wars (not extended) edition

Galactic
History, or Galactic Folk Tale
?, by Max Gladstone/Doctor Flox Beelthrak
& Djane Lel (PS: Fantasy fans, check out Gladstone’s Craft series, where magic works like law, in that magicians are litigators and contract drafters, and loopholes can do you great good or evil.)

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Cert petition in right of publicity case

I joined this brief
in support of cert
in EA v. Davis, as Jennifer
Rothman reports
.

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Every Single Word, spoken no longer due to abusive copyright claim

Dylan Marron’s “Every Single Word Spoken by a Person of Color in [X]” series, where X is a mainstream film, is a powerful indictment of popular culture.  Too powerful for Warner Brothers when it came to Gone With the Wind, apparently, as this notice indicates–and it’s not a DMCA claim, either; Google went along with it.

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